×

Israel To Launch First Spacecraft In December

  An Israeli organisation announced plans Tuesday to launch the country’s first spacecraft to the moon in December, with hopes of burnishing Israel’s reputation as … Continue reading Israel To Launch First Spacecraft In December


This picture shows an Israeli Aerospace Industries spacecraft during a press conference to announce its future launch to the moon, in Yehud, Eastern Tel Aviv, on July 10, 2018. An Israeli organisation announced plans Tuesday to launch the country’s first spacecraft to the moon in December in what is hoped will burnish its reputation as a small nation with otherwordly high-tech ambitions. The unmanned spacecraft, shaped like a pod and weighing some 585 kilogrammes at launch, will land on the moon on February 13, 2019 if all goes according to plan, organisers told journalists. THOMAS COEX / AFP
 Israeli Aerospace Industries spacecraft during a press conference to announce its future launch to the moon, in Yehud, Eastern Tel Aviv, on July 10, 2018. THOMAS COEX / AFP

 

An Israeli organisation announced plans Tuesday to launch the country’s first spacecraft to the moon in December, with hopes of burnishing Israel’s reputation as a small nation with otherworldly high-tech ambitions.

The unmanned spacecraft, shaped like a pod and weighing some 585 kilogrammes (1,300 pounds) at launch, will land on the moon on February 13, 2019, if all goes according to plan, organisers SpaceIL told journalists.

It will be launched via a rocket from American entrepreneur Elon Musk’s SpaceX firm and its mission will include research on the moon’s magnetic field.

Its first task, however, will be to plant an Israeli flag on the moon, organisers said.

The project began as part of the Google Lunar X-Prize, which offered $30 million (25 million euros) in prizes to encourage scientists and entrepreneurs to come up with relatively low-cost moon missions.

An Israeli team that later became known as SpaceIL decided to join the fray and eventually partnered with state-owned Israel Aerospace Industries.

The Google prize expired in March without a winner having reached the moon, but Israel’s team pledged to push forward.

The private initiative is expected to cost some $95 million, largely supported by Israeli billionaire Morris Kahn.

“It’s going to show the way for the rest of the world” to send a spacecraft to the moon at a reasonable cost, said IAI’s Ofer Doron.

AFP